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Darken the Stars(105)

By:Amy A. Bartol


The riptide of the portal slows and the glow begins to dim. My skin is snowy white as I make for the watery hilltop speckled with underwater stars. The current becomes almost nonexistent. It lets go of me. I struggle and tumble in the cold pool as the heavy pack on my back weighs me down. Fighting to reach the bank I can see ahead, my breathing becomes shallower, because the small tank of oxygen is running low. I almost weep when my feet scrape the incline of the bank, and I stand with my head above the water. I trip forward, wading until I fall to my knees and crawl the rest of the way through the black volcanic sand to the lip of the pool. I rip the tankoid from my mouth, taking my first breath on Earth in so many months.

Beside me, Phlix spits out her tankoid, coughing and wheezing as she collapses with her cheek in the sand. We stare at each other, panting and gasping and in shock. I reach out and take her numb hand in mine. I know we have to move soon so that we don’t become hypothermic, but I can’t seem to make myself do it just yet.

Phlix’s voice reverberates in the cave, bouncing off the dripping stalactites that threaten us from the rock above. “Your friends saved us.”

I nod because I can’t speak. I can’t talk about it now or I’ll never make it. I’ll just lay here for the rest of my life with a dead heart. She seems to sense that I’m close to tears.

Instead she asks, “What was in the box?”

“A letter to my sister and a warning not to follow us.”

“Do you think it will work?” she asks.

“I hope so, but we won’t take any chances. We’ll have to hide. We can’t go to Chicago. We have to start over.”

“Where would you like to do that?” Phlix asks.

“Have you ever been to college?”

“I’ve never been anywhere.”

Rising to my feet even though I’d rather not, I help Phlix up. We unwrap each other from ropes and tape. Unfastening our flipcarts, we carry the boards out of the glowing chamber, away from the pool. We put on our night-vision glasses once more, and it’s easier than I expect to find my way to the bottom of the cliff wall; I merely have to follow the footprints on the ground.

Phlix shows me the holographic buttons to press to change the mode and make the flipcart elevate straight up. Hers rises faster than mine. As I rise past the rock, I remember almost dying in this spot. When I’m almost to the top, I don’t know why, but I look down into the darkness and shout out, “Baw-da-baw!” The sound echoes.

Then I’m at the summit, where Phlix is already waiting for me. We shift our flipcarts back to hover mode and surf our way through the rest of the cave. The night sky greets us as we emerge from the dark mouth of the cavern.

Phlix lets out a deep gasp as she sees the moon for the first time. It’s autumn and the moon glows orange, hanging low in the sky. We pause for a moment, staring at it. “They call that a harvest moon,” I say, as my damp hair stirs in the warm fall breeze. “It’s not always like that.”

“Where is the other moon?” she asks.

“There’s only one moon,” I reply.

“That rips my heart out. It must get so lonely,” she murmurs.

“It’s not alone. It has the world.”